Capital Trail

What started as a visionary concept decades ago, and which took 10 years of construction to complete has become a reality! The Virginia Capital Trail is a 52-mile paved path dedicated to pedestrians and bicyclists. Connecting Virginia’s past and present capitals of Jamestown and Richmond, the trail traverses more than 400 years of history along the Scenic Route 5 corridor, one of the first inland routes in North America.

The southern end of the trail is known as the Greensprings segment and begins near the Jamestown Settlement, which provides a unique glimpse of early American history and culture. The trail continues northwest to SR 5, passing Revolutionary War battlegrounds and a 40-acre wooded wetland and wildlife area along the way.

The Chickahominy Riverfront segment seamlessly picks up at the intersection of SR 5 and Greensprings Road (SR 614) and travels to the Chickahominy Riverfront Park, where trail-goers will enjoy majestic views of the James and Chickahominy Rivers. The trail crosses the Chickahominy River on the Judith Stewart Dresser Bridge, which includes a 10-foot wide path separated from traffic by a divider.

The trail’s Sherwood Forest segment begins on the western bank of the river, continues along SR 5, and passes the Sherwood Forest Plantation for which it is named. President John Tyler lived in the estate in the mid-1800s and, although the Tyler family still owns the home, the grounds are open to the public. This section ends at the Charles City County Courthouse, a one-story brick building dating back to 1730 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Continuing west from the courthouse, the Charles City County segment passes many colonial plantation homes, including the Berkeley Plantation (just off Harrison Landing Road). It’s the ancestral home of U.S. Presidents William Henry Harrison and Benjamin Harrison.

The New Market Heights segment runs near the Shirley Plantation, where the mother of Confederate General Robert E. Lee was born. Dating back to 1613, it’s the oldest plantation in Virginia and a National Historic Landmark. The building is located about 3 miles west of the trail on the banks of the James River and is open daily all year except on major holidays.

The Park Phase forms a 3.5-mile horseshoe away from State Route 5, which the majority of the trail so closely follows. This deviation allows the trail to connect to Dorey Park, a popular spot with many recreational amenities, including a playground, sports fields, tennis courts, disc-golf course, picnic areas, a nature trail, a fishing pond, and an off-leash dog park.

The Varina segment runs by Henrico County’s Four Mile Creek Park, a wooded outdoor gem with a canoe launch for accessing the creek. The community is named for Varina Farms, a plantation established by early English settler John Rolfe, who married the famed Pocahontas.

The Richmond Riverfront segment, at the northern end of the trail, parallels Dock Street through Shockoe Bottom, one of the city’s oldest neighborhoods. It begins at the Canal Walk and ends at Great Shiplock Park, which commemorates the canal lock built here in the 1850s.

About Manchester

For many reasons — access to Downtown and the River, its official historic designation, a fabulous array of raw warehouse structures, visionary developers — Manchester has become a favored destination for those who choose to embrace the new version of Richmond.

The industrial nature of the neighborhood means a diversity of architecture, size and scale in the many structures that define the area. From the Corrugated Box Building, 800 Semmes and Warehouse 201 to the incredible development that is South Plant, this gritty and authentic historic neighborhood is quickly fulfilling its destiny as Richmond’s version of Brooklyn.

And with a the incredible rate of redevelopment within its borders, Manchester is just beginning to see the array of amenities that will drive the ‘Manchester Lifestyle’ for years to come.

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